AVAILABLE IN 250 mg and 500 mg CAPSULES / TABLETS, as well as in an assortment of eye and ear formulations

HISTORY AND BACKGROUND

Since the development of penicillin and sulfa drugs, the first commercially produced antibiotics, we have sought to improve upon our ability to combat bacteria. We want medications that:

Can be given orally so that medical treatment can be given at home.

Do not effect the normal bacterial residents of the body adversely.

Have minimal side effects.

Are able to penetrate through infected tissue (pus) or through natural barriers of the body where infection may be sequestered (such as within the eye, nervous system or prostate gland).

Chloramphenicol represents the product of years of antibiotic development. Due to its pH, it shines above most other antibiotics in terms of ability to penetrate into infected tissues and tissues with biological barriers. Chloramphenicol can easily pass deeply through purulent material to the organisms hiding within, through cell membranes to attack parasites living within, and into organs where other antibiotics cannot go.

Chloramphenicol acts on the protein manufacturing system of bacteria (the cell's ribosomes) yet does not affect mammalian, reptilian, or avian ribosomes. With protein manufacture being highly crucial for metabolism, disrupting a cell's ability to make protein is disastrous. Highly susceptible bacteria are killed outright while others are merely rendered unable to divide and the host's immune system then destroys them upon discovery. Chloramphenicol has an especially broad spectrum of activity against numerous aerobic bacteria, mycoplasma, chlamydial organisms, and anaerobic bacteria.

HOW THIS MEDICATION IS USED

Chloramphenicol may be given orally or topically, usually three times daily. Peak activity occurs approximately 30 minutes after an oral dose except in the nervous system where several hours are required for penetration of the blood/brain barrier. This medication is an especially good choice for infections where:

There is a necrotic or walled off area with inner infection (pneumonia is a good example).

Unfortunately, chloramphenicol must be given typically three times daily for dogs. This schedule is relatively inconvenient for most pet owners and probably accounts for this drug falling from favor, replaced by products that can be used twice or even once a day. Cats have some sensitivity issues with this medication (see below) thus it has never been a common feline treatment.

Aside from its uses for obvious infection, chloramphenicol has been used for the musculoskeletal disease called "hypertrophic osteodystrophy" or "HOD." This is a condition of adolescent large or giant breed dogs where they develop painful areas near the growth plates of their long bones. This treatment is of some controversy as the cause of HOD has not been clearly shown to be bacterial and it is does eventually resolve on its own. (In other words, any role of chloramphenicol in the treatment of this condition is difficult to evaluate).

SIDE EFFECTS

In some individuals, chloramphenicol use may induce what are called “blood dyscrasias.” This means that abnormal blood cells can be produced or that production of normal cells can be halted due to an action of chloramphenicol on patient bone marrow. This reaction is especially of concern in cats and chloramphenicol should be used with caution in this species (special dosing, perhaps even some blood monitoring).

Chloramphenicol use may accumulate to toxic levels in very young animals (in first few weeks of life) and as they are not able to remove it from their bodies as effectively as adult animals. For this reason, it is best not to give this medication during pregnancy or lactation.

Nausea, diarrhea, and appetite loss are relatively common (and usually minor) side effects of this medication but if they occur, another medication can be selected.

INTERACTIONS WITH OTHER DRUGS

The following drugs may last longer than expected if used concurrently with chloramphenicol:

Three times a day dosing is inconvenient for most pet owners and often doses are missed. One should be aware that in many cases other antibiotics (which can be given twice daily) could be substituted. If you know that three times daily administration is not likely to be performed reliably, let your veterinarian know this.

Chloramphenicol powder reportedly tastes terrible and may not be accepted if tablets are crushed and mixed with food.

Chloramphenicol should not be used in patients with abnormal bone marrow, non-regenerative anemia, or circulating abnormal blood cells.

Chloramphenicol is removed from the body via the liver's detoxification mechanisms. If a patient is in liver or kidney failure, some other antibiotic is probably a better choice.

Chloramphenicol should not be used in breeding animals or in pregnant females or in newborns.

Vaccinations should not be given during a course of chloramphenicol.

Humans may develop fatal aplastic anemia if exposed orally to chloramphenicol (risk is approximately one person in 25,000). This condition is irreversible and is not dependent upon dosages. For this reason, chloramphenicol has been banned from food animal use in the United States as well as from human use. Washing hands after handling this medication is recommended.